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HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: OUT OF THIS WORLD (2020)

21/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: OUT OF THIS WORLD (2020)
if slow burn, psychological thrillers are your thing, give it a whirl, there is a lot on offer in Out of this World, even if it didn’t push all my buttons.
Out of this World (2020)

A shy man who works as a taxi driver because he can't afford to live as a musician, meets a deaf girl dancer who is attracted to him despite his trouble communicating. (IMDB)

Written and directed by Marc Fouchard

A Horror Movie Review by Mark Walker 
Léo (Kévin Mischel) is a struggling musician, working as a taxi driver and living out of his car as he composes music in-between driving fares and slaughtering innocent women. The killing soothes his inner anger and frustration at the world, silencing the turmoil that threatens his creativity. The killing allows him to create, and he is compelled to keep repeating his crimes as he is compelled to compose.


When he drives deaf dancer Amélie (Aurélia Poirier) to a practice, Léo becomes obsessed, returning to her studio to watch her and eventually pluck up the courage to talk to her; and so begins an awkward relationship which you can only imagine is going to end badly; doomed lovers indeed.


The central conceit of Out of this World is intriguing and the pairing of a deaf dancer, with a serial-killing musician is an interesting one. Both Léo and Amélie struggle with communication, but for vastly different reasons. Léo’s music and Amélie’s dancing threaten to bring out the best of them both, only Amélie is dealing with the emotions of falling for a withdrawn, potential violent man, while Léo is fighting his animal urges. Both characters are outsiders, looking for a place in the world and Amélie might just be the connection Léo needs to save him.


it’s a bit like a darker version of Silver Linings Playbook just without any of the laughs, and as if someone had planted a ticking bomb under the dancefloor at the end.

Out of this World sets itself up as a slow burn psychological thriller and it really does take its time with little dialogue, especially in the first half of the movie. Mischel and Poirier are brilliant in their roles, very believable and they work together to create a palpable air of tension whenever they are on screen. However, for me, the slow pace and lingering scenes of Léo struggling with his inner demons, strayed dangerously close to labouring a point, rather than moving the story forward.

Having said that, Mischel, does a particularly good job of portraying a tortured artist with homicidal tendencies. Scenes with him going through his daily routing as he builds towards another murder are awkward and disturbing, making for uncomfortable viewing. His performance hints at a desire to be saved, to be rescued from his cycle of violence but, sadly, the film doesn’t quite manage to make him sympathetic. There are a couple of scenes that hint at abuse when he was younger and a difficult relationship with his mother but, otherwise, we get little glimpse into his reasons for killing, other than the need to create. While this gives us some motivation, it makes it hard to develop any sympathy or empathy with Léo and, while I wanted to see him saved (and to some extent, perhaps he is) his behaviour from the start of the film, makes it hard to see him as anything other than a monster.
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Poirier does just as good a job beside him, a quiet, but emotional anchor for Léo and someone who can appreciate his music even though she can’t hear it, only feel it; its beat and tempo as a metaphor for Léo’s inner demons.


Pulling both of those performances together is Fouchard’s direction and Pascal Boudet’s cinematography which combine to deliver a solid, stylistic thriller that looks great. It just fell a little short for me for reasons I can’t quite put my finger on.
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That is, of course, my own interpretation of the film and other’s will see things differently. I just didn’t quite gel with it and, ultimately, didn’t feel enough empathy with the characters to be able to fully engage in their exploration of being on outcast in your own world and not knowing quite where you belong.

The 5.9 on IMDB feels about right for Out of this World (so very much NOT a bad film) and I wouldn’t want to put anyone off watching it as the performances are impressive and the film looks fantastic, it just wasn’t quite my cup of tea. However, if slow burn, psychological thrillers are your thing, give it a whirl, there is a lot on offer in Out of this World, even if it didn’t push all my buttons.

Out Of This World is on digital HD 5 December from Bulldog Film Distribution

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HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: NANNY

20/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: NANNY
Jusu’s tale sidesteps the true genre punch, though, which may leave some viewers unsatisfied. But, even for its diabolical sirens and eight-legged tricksters, it’s Nanny’s naked honesty that makes it so scary.
Nanny

Immigrant nanny Aisha, piecing together a new life in New York City while caring for the child of an Upper East Side family, is forced to confront a concealed truth that threatens to shatter her precarious American Dream.

Director Nikyatu Jusu
Writer Nikyatu Jusu
Stars Anna Diop, Michelle Monaghan, Sinqua Walls

A Horror Movie Review by Hope Madden

Senegalese transplant Aisha (a transfixing Anna Diop) cares for a little girl whose mother works too much and whose father is often away. Aisha’s care is tinged with her own deep well of sadness and guilt at handing the care of her own son Lamine over to a friend back in Senegal. But this job will allow her to finally pay for the flight to bring Lamine to NYC, and just in time for his birthday.

Writer/director Nikyatu Jusu’s feature debut employs fantastical elements, but her Nanny is never an outright horror film. Aisha’s visions, though thoroughly spooky and potentially dangerous, speak to the fear, powerlessness and profound sadness facing a woman forever making impossible choices, regardless of the country.

Jusu gives these folklore-rooted images purpose as Aisha awakens to the real nightmare that the American Dream so often becomes. As self-pitying employer Amy (Michelle Monaghan) works long hours to compete in a man’s world, she shorts Aisya’s pay while taking advantage of her time. Reuniting with Lamine feels less and less likely. Helplessness, hopelessness and anger grow.

Jusu’s lighthanded with true horror, a choice that benefits the film because its honesty is horror enough. Diop conveys more with a glance or a sigh than any scaly monster or hairy spider could ever display. Her command of this character’s melancholy and rage is extraordinary.

The addition of Leslie Uggams as Aisha’s love interest Malik’s (Singua Walls) grandmother introduces exposition and explanations that feel slightly forced, particularly compared to the nuance defining the rest of the film. But it’s a slight fault in an otherwise beautiful, devastating movie.
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Like Jenna Cato Bass’s Good Madam, Nanny identifies the uneasy social structure that guarantees inequity, and all the accompanying horror it produces. Jusu’s tale sidesteps the true genre punch, though, which may leave some viewers unsatisfied. But, even for its diabolical sirens and eight-legged tricksters, it’s Nanny’s naked honesty that makes it so scary.

HOPE MADDEN 

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Hope Madden is a writer and award-winning filmmaker living with her husband George and cat Velma in Columbus, Ohio. She writes what scares her, which worked out fine until she became a filmmaker and had to live what scared her for the duration of a shoot. Terrible decision. Her novella, Roost, was published in 2022 by Off Limits Press and her first feature film releases in late 2022.

​Check out Hope's Podcast here : https://soundcloud.com/frightclub

And for more film reviews from Hope check out 

Maddwolf 

https://maddwolf.com/

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HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: AMIGO

18/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: AMIGO
Pareja’s depiction of David’s gradual decline unsettles. Martín rushes nothing, and though he leaves breadcrumbs, you’ll never know for sure where he’s leading you. The result is a somber, unnervingly realistic punch to the gut and a reminder that friendship does not have to be forever.
Amigo

Amigo is a fiction feature film that brings together psychological thriller and black comedy, bordering on the macabre, all in the form of an intimate drama.

Director Óscar Martín
Writers Javier Botet(story)Óscar Martín David Pareja
Stars Javier Botet David Pareja Esther Gimeno


A Horror Movie Review by Hope Madden
Friends are the family we choose.

Yeah, that’s all well and good until one of them turns into Annie Wilkes from Misery.
But it looks like Javi (Javier Botet) has chosen well in David (David Pareja). Director Óscar Martín’s film Amigo, co-written with both Botet and Pareja, opens on David carrying Javi from his car, across a snowy lawn, into an old farmhouse, and to a comfortable bed. That’s not all. David will sit up all night in the chair next to Javi’s bed, just in case his friend-in-need needs anything. That’s devotion.

As the next 80 minutes crawl past, we’re alone with the pair in their isolation. They’re far from town. Snow and ice have made the streets impassable. David’s low on his own medication, and that scar on his forehead marks the throbbing pain he can’t control without it. Plus, shouldn’t Javi be in a hospital?

Slowly but surely, Martín’s film descends with its characters into a nightmare, kind of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane without the egos or lipstick.

To develop palpable tension, Martín takes full advantage of Javier Botet’s physical presence. The actor’s made a name for himself playing silent, nightmare images in REC (Nina Medeiros), Mama (Mama), The Conjuring 2 (Crooked Man), Insidious: The Last Key (Key Face), Slender Man (Slender Man) and more. While he put his physical performance to use doing creature work for Guillermo del Toro, Álex de la Iglesia and other filmmakers, Amigo changes that perspective. Botet’s long, gaunt frame is webbed with the scars of an auto accident, his gangle of bones a macabre reminder of his vulnerability.

Botet’s performance, much of it nearly silent, aches with rage, melancholy and helplessness. Javi’s quiet, burning anger could simply be the natural result of his situation. And his best friend David counters the hostility with buoyant, devoted energy and an unflagging smile.
​
Pareja’s depiction of David’s gradual decline unsettles. Martín rushes nothing, and though he leaves breadcrumbs, you’ll never know for sure where he’s leading you. The result is a somber, unnervingly realistic punch to the gut and a reminder that friendship does not have to be forever.


HOPE MADDEN 

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Hope Madden is a writer and award-winning filmmaker living with her husband George and cat Velma in Columbus, Ohio. She writes what scares her, which worked out fine until she became a filmmaker and had to live what scared her for the duration of a shoot. Terrible decision. Her novella, Roost, was published in 2022 by Off Limits Press and her first feature film releases in late 2022.

​Check out Hope's Podcast here : https://soundcloud.com/frightclub

And for more film reviews from Hope check out 

Maddwolf 

https://maddwolf.com/

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HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: THE HARBINGER

15/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: THE HARBINGER
in the end, it’s an overreliance on genre mechanisms that keeps the film from really cutting free from expectations and saying something truly fresh.
The Harbinger

Plagued by horrific nightmares, a woman enters a hellish dreamscape to confront her greatest fears.

Director: Andy Mitton
Production company: One Bad Idea Films
Music composed by: Andy Mitton
Editor: Andy Mitton
Costume design: Candace Phelan

A Horror Movie Review by Hope Madden

What Andy Mitton’s The Harbinger does well is remind you how desperate the early days of lockdown were. How scary. How lonely. This was especially true for anyone quarantining alone. It must have felt like the world would just go on without you. You’d be forgotten entirely.

Mavis (Emily Davis) is alone, and she is not taking to lockdown well. Her dreams are terrifying and almost unending. When Mavis falls asleep, she doesn’t wake up, sometimes for days, trapped the entire time in a horrifying nightmare. Her friend Mo (Gabby Beans) leaves the comfort and relative safety of the home she shares with her father and brother because Mavis has no one else to call.

Mitton’s film combines collective trauma with existential dread, mirroring the kind of terror that caves in on you when you don’t work, don’t leave home, and fear everything: surfaces, people, the air in your building. It’s a true nightmare, and one you can’t wake up from.

The isolation, the stench of death, it all inspired any number of horror films. Mitton animates that collective ordeal as effectively as anyone working in the genre. He marries the graphic reality of the pandemic with an internal descent, reflecting more than a society’s fear of death. What he sees is the way lockdown, hivemind, misinformation and isolation made people forget who they were.

Davis delivers a solid turn as one wearied to the point of death by quarantine, but it’s Beans’s resilient, naturalistic performance that grounds the unreality in uneasy truth. Mitton’s script sometimes relies on tropes that feel too obvious for his unusual story, and in the end, it’s an overreliance on genre mechanisms that keeps the film from really cutting free from expectations and saying something truly fresh.
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But there’s no question he hits a nerve because very few changes need to be made to the reality of 2020 for it to be a nerve-wracking horror show.


HOPE MADDEN 

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Hope Madden is a writer and award-winning filmmaker living with her husband George and cat Velma in Columbus, Ohio. She writes what scares her, which worked out fine until she became a filmmaker and had to live what scared her for the duration of a shoot. Terrible decision. Her novella, Roost, was published in 2022 by Off Limits Press and her first feature film releases in late 2022.

​Check out Hope's Podcast here : https://soundcloud.com/frightclub

And for more film reviews from Hope check out 

Maddwolf 

https://maddwolf.com/

Check out today's other horror article on
the ginger nuts of horror website 

​MY LIFE IN HORROR: FOR THE LOVE OF NIGHTMARES

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JUST ENOUGH SPOILERS: A SAINT MAUD HYPE PIECE WRITTEN BY JEREMY LIGHT

14/12/2022
JUST ENOUGH SPOILERS: A SAINT MAUD HYPE PIECE WRITTEN BY JEREMY LIGHT
We feel her isolation and witness her devotion. In an emotional sense, this is a fast-paced film, though it is a slow burn film visually. The delicately nuanced atmosphere does not just invite you into her claustrophobic, pious and simplistic life, but swallows you whole.

SAINT MAUD
Film
2019
Written and directed by Rose Glass
Starring Morfydd Clark and Jennifer Ehle
Running time 84 minutes
A24 Films
Folk horror, Psychological Horror
Welcome to the brand news series of articles from Jeremy Light, A24 x the Pain, where jeremy takes a deep dive into the films from the horror movie studio A24.  Today Jeremy takes a look at Saint Maude. 

Hyper-empathic Maud, a devout Roman Catholic home hospice nurse, cares for her worldly atheist patient… a little too much.

Saint Maud is categorically and definitively a folk horror film. I hope (dare I say pray?) that viewers don’t see the keywords “Catholic, saint and horror” and assume it’s yet another uninspired exorcism or spooky demonic possession “entertainment movie”. They would be grossly underestimating Rose Glass’ magnificent debut film.

The film explores faith, hyper-religiosity, perceived moral duty and the connective tissue between complex mental illness and supernatural religious experiences. Surely the question “Am I hearing God's voice or hallucinating?” has been asked by countless faithful believers.

Maud is in almost every frame of the film. This is a brilliant method of immersive character introduction. We feel her isolation and witness her devotion. In an emotional sense, this is a fast-paced film, though it is a slow burn film visually. The delicately nuanced atmosphere does not just invite you into her claustrophobic, pious and simplistic life, but swallows you whole.

Maud’s patient, Amanda, is a retired dancer from the United States. Though dying of cancer, she unrepentantly smokes cigarettes indoors. Against the backdrop of her luxurious, tastefully decorated house, she and Maud discuss the life cycle and her fear of death. Maud reassures Amanda that through a belief in God that she can be saved and to be comforted and free of that fear. Amanda, a steadfast atheist responds with laughter and says that “there is no God”.

Woven between these scenes of Maud and Amanda’s interactions are flashbacks to Maud’s life before she became so ardent about her faith. It’s revealed that during a traumatizing emergency room incident, she gave chest compressions to a male patient with stitches along his chest and pushed right through them, killing him instantly. This horrific peripeteia could alter the trajectory of anyone’s life, especially Maud’s.
Saint Maude review Images Horror movie .jpg
Maud is regularly belittled by Amanda and her friends. Amanda is a lesbian woman and doesn’t hold that back around Maud. In fact, Maud enjoys an extended voyeuristic peep and seemingly enjoys watching the physical intimacy. She may be reminiscing or yearning for that sensuality herself. During Amanda’s birthday party, in which Maud is sort of forced to cater, she is belittled and insulted by an intoxicated party-goer holding a folded linen across Maud’s forehead and amongst others, Amanda says things such as “look at our little nun”, etc. Maud responds by slapping the taste out of Amanda’s mouth, so to speak. Though she was provoked to do so, she is removed from the party immediately.

Now we get to see the beginning of Maud’s return to her lifestyle before she was a devout Catholic caregiver. Including but not limited to: sex and public sexual acts with strangers, hard drug use, blackout drinking and religious self-torture, there are a few of her favorite things. Now that I have you hooked, or rather Maud’s hooks in you, I’d rather not spoil the rest of the film. I’d be doing a disservice to the readers, the viewers and all of the people that came together to make this magnificent film.

​​

Jeremy Light

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Jeremy Light's work has been featured in Apocrypha & Abstractions, Flash Fiction Magazine, Hindered Souls Horror Anthology and Pale Ghosts Magazine. Jeremy has worked as an editor at a magazine, but became a freelancer by editing a horror manuscript for a client in 2022. Jeremy is studying at Tisch School of Arts NYU and writing film reviews and analysis during bouts of insomnia.

the heart and soul of horror movie review websites 

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HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: BONES AND ALL

8/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: BONES AND ALL
He embraces the strength of the solid YA theme that you have to be who you are, no matter how ugly the world may tell you that is. You have to be you, bones and all.
​Bones and All

Love blossoms between a young woman on the margins of society and a disenfranchised drifter as they embark on a 3,000-mile odyssey through the backroads of America. However, despite their best efforts, all roads lead back to their terrifying pasts and a final stand that will determine whether their love can survive their differences.
​
Release date: 23 November 2022
Director: Luca Guadagnino
Cinematography: Arseni Khachaturan
Costume design: Giulia Piersanti
Distributed by: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Warner Bros. Pictures, Vision Distribution, United Artists Releasing

A Horror Movie Review by Hope Madden
You might be surprised to know there is some cinematic precedent for cannibal romances. Julia Ducourneau’s Raw equated coming-of-age with the lust for human flesh. Claire Denis did something similar with her 2001 French horror Trouble Every Day, and Ana Lily Amirpour’s 2017 The Bad Batch chewed that same bone. And of course, there’s Joe D’Amato’s 1977 softcore Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals, although I don’t recommend that one.

I do recommend Luca Guadagnino’s latest, based on Camille DeAngelis’s popular YA novel, Bones and All.

The film follows Maren (an absorbing Taylor Russell, Waves), coming of age on the fringes of Reagan-era America. She meets and slowly falls for another outcast with similar tastes, Lee (Timothée Chalamet), and the two take to the road.

Given what the handsome young lovers have in common, you might expect a sort of meat lovers’ Badlands to follow. But Bones and All is less concerned with the carnage left in a wake than in what’s awakening in these characters themselves. 
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And all the characters are quite something. Michael Stuhlbarg, David Gordon Green, Chloë Sevigny, Sean Bridgers and especially Mark Rylance populate an America easily corrupted by invalidation, loneliness, otherness. “This world of love has no love for a monster.”

These characters range from creepy to terrifying, their potential danger even more unnerving than the violence they exact. They become the obstacles along Maren and Lee’s romantic journey, but Guadagnino (Suspiria, Call Me By Your Name) and a terrific cast never let them amount only to that.
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Bones and All is a tough one to categorize. I suppose it’s a horror film, a romance, and a road picture – not three labels you often find on the same movie. In Guadagnino’s hands, it’s more than that, though. He embraces the strength of the solid YA theme that you have to be who you are, no matter how ugly the world may tell you that is. You have to be you, bones and all. Finding Maren’s way to that epiphany is heartbreaking and bloody but heroic, too.


HOPE MADDEN 

HOPE MADDEN


Hope Madden is a writer and award-winning filmmaker living with her husband George and cat Velma in Columbus, Ohio. She writes what scares her, which worked out fine until she became a filmmaker and had to live what scared her for the duration of a shoot. Terrible decision. Her novella, Roost, was published in 2022 by Off Limits Press and her first feature film releases in late 2022.

Check out Hope's Podcast here : https://soundcloud.com/frightclub

And for more film reviews from Hope check out 

Maddwolf 

https://maddwolf.com/

the heart and soul of horror movie review websites 

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HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: CHRISTMAS BLOODY CHRISTMAS

7/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: CHRISTMAS BLOODY CHRISTMAS
Joe Begos' Christmas Bloody Christmas, much like Cliff Richard's Mistletoe and Wine, is a brutal and bloody assault on the senses.
Christmas Bloody Christmas 

It's Christmas Eve and fiery record store owner Tori Tooms just wants to get drunk and party, until the robotic Santa Claus at a nearby toy store goes haywire and makes her night more than a little complicated. Santa embarks on a rampant killing spree through the neon-drenched snowscape, ultimately forcing Tori into a blood-splattered battle for survival.

Release date: 9 December 2022
Director: Joe Begos

​
A Horror Movie Review by Jim Mcleod 
There are loads of Santa as the villain horror movies out there, but none of them has quite the same degree of over-the-top, sensational sense of fun as Christmas Bloody Christmas. Joe Begos, director of the amazing VFW and Bliss, returns with a glorious Christmas-themed horror movie that proves that Christmas is not the holiday it is cracked up to be. Where VFW was an excellent love letter to John Carpenter movies, especially Assault on Precinct 13, Christmas Bloody Christmas is, in this humble reviewer's opinion, a love letter to Terminator. Both films feature a near-unkillable cybernetic killing machine, and both films feature a kick-ass leading lady, as well as inept cops who just won't listen to our heroine. As with VFW, Begos infuses Christmas Bloody Christmas with enough fresh ideas and a clear sense of directorial flair to ensure that the film never feels like a cheap rip-off of the Terminator for one minute.  


Shot on 16MM film, Begos cleverly gives the film that grainy feel that we expect from a movie from the 70s / 80s; combined with the inspired use of opening the film with a couple of "fake" adverts that scream of 80s consumerism, you know from the first few minutes that you are in for a fun time with Christmas Bloody Christmas.


The plot of the film is simple, a bunch of military robots have been recommissioned as Mall Santas, but as is want to happen in these sorts of movies, our fat, friendly Father Christmas, for no apparent reason, decides to default to factory settings and turn into a homicidal manic hell-bent on killing our heroine and all who dare to stand in her way.  


Some of you might be screaming, but why does Santa do that? What's the reason for his change in programming? That's stupid but stick with it as it fits perfectly with the narrative when taken in the context of the whole film. Begos leans right into the absurdity of this. With a total disregard for physics, electrical engineering and, at times, the laws of nature, this is one of many reasons why this horror movie is so much fun. Hell, even though the robot's wiring is composed of neon light-up wires, there is no logical sense why the internal workings of the killer robot would light up, but it just works. I had a massive smile when the robot's insides were first revealed. For those familiar with the director's previous films, you will bask at his masterful use of colour grading and his distinctive use of garish colour choices in the movie.  


As for the plot, it is relatively simple; a store has one of the recommissioned Santa it goes crazy and, for some unknown reason, becomes fixated on killing our heroine, Tori (Riley Dandy) and her co-worker who has the hots for her, Robbie, will they survive, but more importantly will Tori and Robbie hook up, or will Tori finally make it to her blind date, with a bloke who everyone else thinks is a douchebag. 


In terms of how Christmas Bloody Christmas feels, its sensibilities are cemented in '70s exploitation B-cinema; from the grainy feel of the movie to the physical special effects and the glorious over-the-top use of blood whenever anyone gets stabbed, stomped on or shot, Begos never shies away from giving us the film that fans of these sort of movies want. In particular, a glorious head-stomping scene will make even the most hardcore horror fans wince in pain.  


But this is Tori's story, played by Riley Dandy, who lights up the screen for every frame of this film with a dazzling and triumphant performance that surely must be ranked up there along with the all-time best Scream Queens and final girls. Riley's infectious, hypnotic performance is utterly enthralling; you can feel the energy of her character buzzing across the screen, to the point where you want to crawl into the Tv screen just on the off chance that you can spend a few minutes in her company. But props must also be given to Sam Delich, who plays her workmate Robbie, who is clearly desperate to hook up with her. He has the same manic intensity as Riley, and the pair of them play off each other spectacularly, endowing the film with a well needed heart that is often missing from modern horror films.  


I loved the will they, won't they dynamics of their relationships, we the viewer know they are a perfect match, and you will be screaming just bloody snog him, woman, you know you want to. Do they end up together? Well, that will be telling.  


The first half of the movie, before psycho Santa goes on the rampage, is a wonderful character study on human attraction; the interplay between Tori and Robbie is fantastic; imagine a more sweary, drunk and doped-up version of Dante and Randal from Clerks, with them arguing about everything from horror movies music and whether on not Tor's potential suitor is a total douche.


Christmas Bloody Christmas also totally delivers on the horror front; once the killing starts, Begos ensures that the die-hard slasher fans are not left wanting; with some brilliant kills and a tremendous sense of fun, you know that you are having as great a time watching the film as Begos had making it. With movies like the latest Halloween films eschewing the heart that made their previous instalments so much fun to deliver just a vehicle for the kills, it was a breath of fresh air to watch a film that understands that a slasher horror movie needs to be more than just a basic framework for the next kill.  


Joe Begos' Christmas Bloody Christmas, much like Cliff Richard's Mistletoe and Wine, is a brutal and bloody assault on the senses. If you only watch one Christmas themed horror movie, it better be this one. You wouldn't want to get a visit from psycho robosanta, do you?  

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HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: A WOUNDED FAWN

6/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW A WOUNDED FAWN
The final image – unblinking, lengthy, horrible and fantastic – cements A Wounded Fawn as an audacious success.
A Wounded Fawn


Director Travis Stevens
Writers Nathan Faudree Travis Stevens
Stars Sarah Lind Josh Ruben Malin Barr

A serial killer brings an unsuspecting new victim on a weekend getaway to add another body to his ever-growing count. She's buying into his faux charms, and he's eagerly lusting for blood. What could possibly go wrong?

A Horror Movie Review by Hope Madden

In 2019, Travis Stevens directed his first feature, Girl on the Third Floor, a haunted house film in which the house is the protagonist. It not only looked amazing, but the unusual POV shots did more than break up the monotony of a film set almost exclusively inside one building. Those peculiar shots gave the impression of the house’s own point of view – a fresh and beguiling choice.

Stevens’s 2021 film Jakob’s Wife waded more successfully into feminist territory, benefitted from brilliant, veteran performances, and turned out to be one of the best horror shows of the year. In many ways, the filmmaker’s latest, A Wounded Fawn, picks up where those left off – which does not mean you’ll see where it’s heading.

Josh Ruben is Bruce. Marshall Taylor Thurman is the giant Red Owl Bruce sees, a manifestation of that part of Bruce that compels him to murder women. The next in line seems to be Meredith (Sarah Lind). After finally getting past the trauma of a long-term abusive relationship, Meredith is taking a leap with a nice new guy, heading for an intimate weekend at his cabin.

This sort of sounds like Donnie Darko meets about 100 movies you’ve seen, but it is not. Not at all. Bruce bids on high-end art at auctions, Meredith curates a museum, and Stevens’s film is awash in the most gorgeous, surreal imagery – odes to Leonora Carrington, among others. And, like the POV shots from Girl on the Third Floor, these visual choices do more than give the movie its peculiar and effective look.

At the center of Bruce’s personal journey is a sculpture he stole from his last victim, a piece depicting the Furies attacking Orestes, who was driven mad by their torture for his crimes against his mother. It’s a great visual, an excellent metaphor for a serial killer comeuppance movie. It’s also an excellent reminder that art has a millennia-long history of depicting women’s vengeance upon toxic men – in case anyone is tired of this “woke” trend.

Lind more than convinces in the character’s tricky spot of being open to new romance and guarding against red flags. We’ve seen Ruben play the nice guy who’s not really as nice as he thinks, but his sinister streak and sincere narcissism here are startling.

The film does an about-face at nearly its halfway mark, not only changing from Bruce’s perspective to Meredith’s, but evolving from straightforward narrative to something hallucinatory and fascinating.
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The final image – unblinking, lengthy, horrible and fantastic – cements A Wounded Fawn as an audacious success.

HOPE MADDEN 

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Hope Madden is a writer and award-winning filmmaker living with her husband George and cat Velma in Columbus, Ohio. She writes what scares her, which worked out fine until she became a filmmaker and had to live what scared her for the duration of a shoot. Terrible decision. Her novella, Roost, was published in 2022 by Off Limits Press and her first feature film releases in late 2022.

​Check out Hope's Podcast here : https://soundcloud.com/frightclub

And for more film reviews from Hope check out 

Maddwolf 

https://maddwolf.com/

Check today's other article on the ginger nuts of horror website 


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HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: BLOOD RELATIVES

5/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: BLOOD RELATIVES
The film’s greatest weakness is its final act, which is enjoyable but unsatisfying. Still, the entertaining Blood Relatives delivers a savvy family comedy.
Blood Relatives

A vampire's loner lifestyle is thrown into disarray when a teenager shows up claiming to be his daughter, and she's got the fangs to prove it. On a road trip across America's blacktops, they decide how to sink their teeth into family life.

Director: Noah Segan
Writer: Noah Segan
Stars: Noah Segan, Victoria Moroles, Akasha Villalobos
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A Horror Movie Review by Hope Madden

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Noah Segan – a welcome surprise in a Dude-esque role in Rian Johnson’s mystery romp Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery – embodies quite a different character for another new release, Blood Relatives.

Segan writes, directs and stars as well, upending the traditional coming-of-age perspective as a vampire learning of a teenage daughter and figuring out how to become a parent. It’s a darkly comedic road trip toward mundanity.

Segan’s screenplay is loose but knowing. It never feels overly scripted but offers enough backstory to ground the tale. And though moments feel familiar – maybe a bit of Near Dark and Stakeland with far more humor and far less dystopia – there is something pleasantly new afoot in this film.

Francis (Segan) is a loner in a muscle car, making his way hither and yon across dusty old by-ways and trying not to draw attention to himself. It’s a lonesome road, but what are you going to do? Jane (Victoria Moroles, Plan B) is a 15-year-old: sarcastic, hostile – you know, normal. Only she’s not normal and now that her mom’s gone, she intends to find out who she is.

That’s the simple success of Segan’s story. It’s about two people figuring out who they are, as we all must. Without feeling preachy or pretentious, Blood Relatives offers some real insight into what parenting ought to be. Even when the only thing you really have in common is the desire to suck the life out of people.

Moroles excels in the role of an angsty teen who recognizes the symbolism of turning into a monster as you hit adolescence. She’s slyly funny but moments of tenderness humanize her Jane. Likewise, Segan finds an arc that suits a man-turned-killer trying to turn back into a man.

Supporting turns, while small, all add a nice spark to the proceedings. Josh Rubin, in particular, is a creepy delight in a Renfield-esque role.
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The film’s greatest weakness is its final act, which is enjoyable but unsatisfying. Still, the entertaining Blood Relatives delivers a savvy family comedy.

HOPE MADDEN 

HOPE MADDEN
Hope Madden is a writer and award-winning filmmaker living with her husband George and cat Velma in Columbus, Ohio. She writes what scares her, which worked out fine until she became a filmmaker and had to live what scared her for the duration of a shoot. Terrible decision. Her novella, Roost, was published in 2022 by Off Limits Press and her first feature film releases in late 2022.


Check out Hope's Podcast here : https://soundcloud.com/frightclub

And for more film reviews from Hope check out 

Maddwolf 

https://maddwolf.com/

the heart and soul of horror movie review websites 

Comments

HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: SHADOWS

4/12/2022
HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: SHADOWS
Shadows doesn’t break any new ground on a narrative level, but it does feature three captivating performances by an entirely female cast.
Shadows

Directed by Carlo Lavagna.
Written by Damiano Bruè, Fabio Mollo, Vanessa Picciarelli.
Starring Mia Threapleton, Lola Petticrew, Saskia Reeves


A Horror Movie Review by Brandon Thomas

Growing up is tough, especially once adolescence rears its ugly head. Your body gets weird, emotions are all over the map, and you don’t know shit despite thinking you do. Now imagine growing up amidst a global catastrophe with an overbearing mother and not being able to step foot into the daylight. In Shadows, this scenario ends up being a recipe for disaster.

Alma (Mia Threapleton) and her sister Alex (Lola Petticrew) live in total isolation with their mother (Saskia Reeves). The girls remember nothing of their lives before a catastrophic event drove the family deep into the woods. By day, the family stays indoors hiding from mysterious entities known as “Shadows” – beings that live in the daylight and fully inhabit the land beyond the river. As the sisters’ rebellious curiosity takes hold, they begin to wonder about the world beyond the river, especially as their mother’s grip on reality becomes more and more tenuous. 

Director Carlo Lavagna makes the close bond between Alma and Alex the focal point of Shadows. The mother almost exists on the periphery of their lives – appearing to reprimand them or scare them back into obedience. Even though they are teens, there’s a stunted immaturity to the sisters that’s hard to ignore and makes their situation all the sadder. Threapleton, daughter of actress Kate Winslett, walks a tightrope between inner strength and debilitating reliance on her emotionally distant mother. Many times Threapleton does both within the same scene.

The depiction of Mother is another bright spot. Mother appears sparingly – keeping the audience at arm’s length just as she does with Alma and Alex. Her coldness is rivaled only by her calculated survival instincts and desire to keep the sisters confined and “safe.” The mysterious nature of Mother helps keep us in the same shoes as the constantly confused and fearful sisters. 

For a film that spends so much time in the same location, the cinematography is a standout. Cinematographer James Mather (Frank, Extra Ordinary) has an incredible eye for space and makes the world the family lives in feel spacious, yet closed in and emotionally walled off. The daytime threat of the Shadows themselves is visualized through a harshness in the few daylight scenes that is contrasted perfectly by beautiful nighttime photography.

Where Shadows stumbles is on its way to the finish line. Most viewers will see the “surprise” ending telegraphed a mile away and feel a bit underwhelmed at its perceived cleverness. The climax – while not wholly original – doesn’t retroactively make the rest of the film feel lesser. 
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Shadows doesn’t break any new ground on a narrative level, but it does feature three captivating performances by an entirely female cast.


Brandon Thomas 

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Brandon Thomas works in Central Ohio’s prolific library industry.
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When not worrying about circulation related matters, Brandon is usually re-watching John Carpenter’s filmography for the 100th time or musing about Star Wars. He once tried to care about French new wave, but it didn’t stick. Brandon is also a Central Ohio Film Critics Association member.

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